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St Patrick’s Day Scavenger Hunt by Ann Treacy
March 18, 2008, 11:02 am
Filed under: Dublin

On Saturday Aine went to a birthday party – which left me and the big girls alone to do the St Patrick’s Day treasure hunt. It was great! Our team was called the Super Searchers.

Teams of up to 4 people were invited to follow the hunt throughout the city. We had to visit 9 places, answer questions from each place and get a stamp. Spot prizes were given out – the team with the best time (not us) won a weekend in a hotel in Dublin.

It rained the whole day, we had several wardrobe malfunctions, we stopped for lunch in the middle of the “race” but we had a great time. We spent over 5 hours on the hunt.

Here’s the blow by blow: Continue reading



Pearl @ Docklands by Ann Treacy
March 17, 2008, 10:23 pm
Filed under: Dublin

On Friday night we saw the coolest street show ever. Here’s the description from the St Patrick’s festival web site:

St. Patrick’s Festival and Dublin Docklands presents the Irish premiere of Pearl by the world renowned street theatre company Plasticiens Volants (France). This is an outdoor spectacle for a family audience. Giant inflated puppets will take over the dramatic surroundings of Georges Dock to tell this enchanting story of the precarious journey of a precious pearl. Audiences will be immersed in an extraordinary underwater world of flying fish, ‘joker’ squids, bewitched jellyfish and a scary sea snake. An extraordinary aerial aquarium on a city scale which is not to be missed.

I took a lot of video but I figured I’d just post a couple and give the link for the rest – for the interested minority.



Spring Break – 2 Weeks?! by Ann Treacy
March 17, 2008, 10:04 am
Filed under: Dublin

The girls finished school at noon on Friday and don’t go back for two weeks. Aine’s Montessori class did a play for the last. Below is a video clip of the performance.



Sunday in Sandycove by Ann Treacy
March 17, 2008, 10:00 am
Filed under: Bloomsday, Dun Laoghaire

Our insanely optimistic plan for today was to follow the Bloomsday trail around Dublin. What I the heck is Bloomsady? Well, James Joyce’s book Ulysses is about a day in the life of Leopold Bloom and to a lesser degree Stephen Daedalus. The book follows their paths through Dublin on June 16, 1904. Every year, loads of people follow the map on the anniversary. We did it ourselves 15 years ago. I got it into my head that it would be fun to do the trip in the off season with the kids.

We didn’t get very fair – but the videos below highlight what we did see. And we’ll start again where we left off another day. If you want to read some fun Cliff Notes for Ulysses, check out James Joyce for Dummies

After the trip to Sandycove, we took a drive around Killiney and Dalkey. It’s not really that far from where we live but the homes and the views are amazing! We drove by Enya’s caste and Bono’s house.


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Saturday Dublin Book Festival & Harbor Bar by Ann Treacy
March 9, 2008, 1:27 pm
Filed under: Bray, Dublin

On Saturday we went to the Dublin Book Festival. Patrick got to see a conversation with Joseph O’Connor (we had dinner with him in the Fall) and Dermot Bolger. I got to hear Medbh McGuckian read her poetry. (For those who don’t know I did by MA dissertation-ette on Medbh McGuckian.) She read with Joan Newmann, who I didn’t know but whose poetry I really enjoyed.

We thought that there would be more events for kids – but there weren’t. A photographer from the Irish Times was there and took a picture of Lily and Aine – we’ll let you know if they make it in the paper.

We did get to eat birthday cake for the IBBY (International Board on Books for Young People) so that took the edge of for the kids. Also we ate at Eddy Rocket’s – which also makes the kids happy. As it should; it’s not very good but it’s very kid-friendly.

At night Patrick and I trekked out to Bray to meet Conor, a fellow PhD candidate. He is friendly and we both enjoy him. He brought us to a pub on the sea called the Harbor Pub. It was really 3 pubs in one: alternative music with a psychedelic feel in one room, a snug, and more traditional room – where they actually started playing traditional music. We were there fairly early and had prime seats near the bar.

The bar is near Ardmore Studios and apparently patrons from the studio have brought props to the bar – so there’s a very eclectic feel. I wish there were something like that closer to our place.
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Terrence Brown Book Launch by Ann Treacy
March 9, 2008, 1:05 pm
Filed under: Dublin

On Tuesday night we went to a book launch for Terrence Brown. It was ablaze with the Irirsh literati. We saw Nobel Prize winning poet Seamus Heaney, one of my favorite poet’s to see read Brendan Kennelly, a poet I saw read the next day Eilean Ni Chuilleanain, professor we had at UCD Declan Kiberd, and many others.

The biggest treat was seeing a friend we made last summer Derek Hand. Derek presented at Patrick’s summer school last year. We always enjoy Derek and he’s the one who sent the heads up on the book launch.

The unfortunate this was that there was free wine but no food at the event and we headed to the pub, not for a meal after the event. We had a fun time – but paid for it the next day.

The event was held at the Royal Irish Academy is a fancy place and it was fun to go into one of the fancy buildings with a purpose. We took some pictures. We tried to catch Seamus Heaney, but I’m not sure that we succeeded.
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Frankenstein – the play by Ann Treacy
March 9, 2008, 12:51 pm
Filed under: Dun Laoghaire

I forgot to mention last weekend that we went to see Frankenstein the play at the Pavilion Theatre. It was a very fun show.

It made me jump at least twice – thanks in large part to the strobe light lightning and loud thunder effects. So it wasn’t a subtle play – but you don’t really go to Frankenstein for subtlety. On the bud ride home we overheard someone on the phone tell someone just how great the show was. Now maybe I wouldn’t have said great – but knowing someone else loved it made it even better.

One thing they did that I sort of liked is they read out pieces from news stories about people trying to build people or bring them back from the dead – just a cloning or very early electronic shocks to bring people back.

Due to an accident of bus arrival – it was cold so we took the first but that headed near the house – we ended up stopping at a pub called the Dean’s Grange on the way home. We often stop there. In the daylight it’s a healthy walk from home in the park – in the dark it’s too dangerous. It was packed; it’s never packed. And they have live music – so it was a nice bonus.



Viking Splash Tour by Ann Treacy
March 3, 2008, 2:58 pm
Filed under: Dublin

To keep in theme of our very touristy weekend, we went on the Viking Splash Tour on Sunday. The tour uses an amphibian truck to drive through the city and then take a dip into the Grand Canal.

It’s goofy but it’s fun. The driver/tour guide gets the whole bus to growl like Vikings at unsuspecting people throughout the city. The tour guide was excellent – he crams a ton of information into a little space by talking really fast. Also my talking really fast he can fit in jokes that really aren’t appropriate for a PG crowd.

I took a few pictures, which turned out to be useless but I did shoot some video, which is kind of fun if you have the time.

Again here’s a laundry list of the things I learned or saw:

  • We boated past the studio where U2 recorded all but one of their albums.
  • We boated by apartments where Colin Farrell owns all top five penthouses.
  • A penthouse room in the Clarence Hotel (owned by Bono and the Edge) costs €2100 – that’s over $3000 a night!
  • We drove by the place where they made a Spice Girl video.
  • We drove by markers for the original Dublin City Walls (castle walls) in the Liberties. I know that’s not that interesting for a blog but it helped to figure out what a small city – but larger castle Dublin was.
  • I learned many color phrases for the Spire on O’Connell Street (one of the video below goes through them).
  • The Whitehouse in DC was designed after Leinster House (where the Dail/govenement meet).
  • The smallest cemetery in Dublin is just a few doors down form the Shelburne, one of the fanciest hotels in Dublin.

There’s a ton more but that’s all I can remember today. (You’ll have to click below to see the videos.) Continue reading



The Mermaid at Dublin’s Castle by Ann Treacy
March 3, 2008, 2:38 pm
Filed under: Dublin

Saturday we all went to out to eat for Patrick’s mom’s birthday. (Her actual birthday is February 29!) We met up with Fearghal at the Mermaid in town. It’s a very nice restaurant. We went for lunch so we didn’t bug people too much with the kids. Kate has found a new love of crème brulee. (It was ginger and rhubarb – mmm!)

After lunch we went up to the Dublin Castle. We started at the Gardens. They are public gardens in the middle of the city but they are obscured by the castle – so they are very quiet. The girls enjoyed running around the labyrinth-like patterns in the lawn. (See the video below.)

Next we stopped in at the Chester Beatty Library. He collected materials on religions from all over the world. So we saw very early renditions of the Bible and the Koran. We also learned a little bit about Buddhism, Islam, and Confucianism. Also we visited the rooftop garden – again the girls really enjoyed running around for a while.

Then we toured the Castle, which is more like a palace. We took a few pictures below. Rather than go blow by blow I thought I better just list out what I remembered:

  • The initial Dublin Castle burned down in 1673. There is one tower (the Records Tower) that remains.
  • The Castle used to house the Crown Jewels buy they were stolen in 1907.
  • Hibernia is a Roman word that means winter or never-ending winter. Ireland was not a holiday destinations for the Romans.
  • The Castle was used by the British Monarchy until after the 1916 rebellion.
  • We got to see a number of rooms.
  • The hall is designed to look exactly like Versailles. It also resembles the halls of the old House of Lords (now Bank of Ireland) halls.
  • The harp of Dublin faces the opposite direct form the Harp beer harp.
  • The Castle is still used today – funny enough we haven’t yet been invited to any events. Clearly my evil step mother has hidden my invitation to the ball.

Inside the castle walls was an area called the Pale. That original space was slightly smaller than Trinity College is today. Christchurch was originally a Catholic church for the folks within the City walls. St Patrick’s Cathedral was for the others, who lived beyond the Pale.

We got to go into the original castle – the really old, built-by-Vikings castle. I took some pictures which may or may not have turned out so I included a little video (below). The original wall was built 1000 years ago. It is formed of bricks and a glue made of horse hair, egg, and animal blood.

Near the original wall we could see the Poddle, a river that runs underneath the Caste and the City of Dublin. It formed the original moat for the castle. The waters of the Poddle are murky and dark and formed a dark pool – or in Irish a Dubh Linn.

Here’s a test to see if Patrick reads the blog. Apparently Patrick’s family races back to the father of Red Hugh O’Donnell: In 1592, Red Hugh O’Donnell and Art O’Neill escaped from Dublin Castle via a drain into the Poddle, which runs under the Castle from Ship Street gate to the Chapel Royal and the Undercroft.

Anyways, seeing the original of part of the castle (which has only been open to the public since the 1990s) was the coolest part of the tour.
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